We've received a few questions from clients about the new Ongoing Fee Arrangements (OFA), so our team of lawyers and consultants have teamed up to answer some of the most frequently asked questions.

Consent

How does express written consent work when there are joint account holders?  How does this work if we are sending consent requirements via email with a link to respond that they are providing consent?

Each of the joint account holders will need to give their written consent. The ASIC Corporations (Consent to Deductions - Ongoing Fee Arrangements) Instrument states that the written consent may only be given by an account holder by signing or agreeing in writing (including electronically) to the terms of the written consent.

If you are requiring clients:

  • to sign the consent - each account holder must sign the consent; or
  • to provide their consent by responding via an electronic link - you must obtain the written response from each account holder.

With SMSFs with multiple trustees/directors, do they also need to each provide express written consent?

If an SMSF has multiple trustees, each trustee will need to provide their written consent.

If an SMSF has a corporate trustee, whether one or all of the directors must provide the written consent will depend on the wording of the SMSF's constitution.

Fee Disclosure Statement (FDS)

Can we separate between a major service (the review) and a minor service/option available to the clients?  Why doesn't the FDS Template list ad hoc services that may be offered?

The obligation is to include information about the amount of each ongoing fee to be paid by your client, and the services that your client will be entitled to receive.

How you choose to present this information is up to you. So, services which will definitely be provided, and others that may be provided depending on the circumstances, can be separated. Ensure that the client's entitlement to each service, and the fee that will or may be payable, is clear.

If you include 'optional' or 'reactive' services, you will still need to specify the service and a reasonable estimate of the fee if the actual fee is not known. Importantly, the client should not be charged a fee for a service that the client does not take up or receive.

We also note that services can be provided to a client on an ad hoc basis that fall outside the scope of the OFA and can be charged separately.

Anniversary Day

Is the anniversary date the date the "Instruction to proceed" is signed, or earlier in the process, such as when the adviser is engaged before the SOA is created?

The "anniversary day" is defined in the legislation (section 962G(3) of the Act) as "the anniversary of the day on which the arrangement was entered into".

The date an arrangement is entered into will be the date that the client agrees to the ongoing fee arrangement (OFA).

It will generally be when the offer you make to the client to provide the services for a fee for a period of more than 12 months, is accepted by the client. An ongoing fee arrangement could be oral.

So, it's a question of fact that depends on the evidence. For this reason, we recommend that you record your OFA in writing, that it specifies the date it commenced, and that it be signed. The anniversary date will be one year after that date.

In ASIC's FAQ 7, it gives the example where the client signs an Authority to Proceed to enter into an ongoing fee arrangement on 15 August 2021, and states that the anniversary day for that arrangement will be 15 August for all future years

What is the difference between the disclosure date (in the old regime) vs anniversary date (in the new regime) for existing clients?

'Disclosure day' is the concept currently used in the law to calculate when an FDS must be given.  Currently, this is 60 days from the anniversary day.

Under the new law, the concept of a 'disclosure day' is not used.  The timing for giving the FDS, for receiving the client's election to renew the OFA, and the date of termination in the absence of the client electing to renew the OFA, will be based on the anniversary day (AD):

  • Re the FDS: AD + 60 days
  • Re renewal: AD + 120 days
  • Re termination: AD + 150 days

For your existing client base, the day you provide them with an FDS during the transition period will become the "anniversary day".  For all new clients that sign up to an OFA after 1 July 2021, the "anniversary day" will be the day that the OFA is entered into.

Other

If the OFA terminates and we need to enter into a new fee arrangement with the client, is a new SOA required?

A distinction must be made between the ongoing fee arrangement (OFA), which is the arrangement agreed to between a retail client and the adviser for the provision of personal advice where an ongoing fee will be paid, and an SOA, which is an advice document triggered by the giving of personal advice to a retail client.

A new OFA does not trigger the need for an SOA, only the giving of financial product advice does that.

Is the 60, 120 days running concurrently?

Yes - both the 60-day period to give an FDS and the 120-day renewal period run concurrently from the anniversary day, regardless of when the FDS is given within that period.

For example, if the anniversary day is 1 January:

  • the FDS needs to be given by 1 March (60 days from 1 January);
  • the election to renew needs to be received by 30 April (120 days from 1 January).

The 120-day time period that dictates the date by which the licensee must receive the election to renew will not change, regardless of whether the FDS was provided on 1 January, 10 January, 20 February, etc.

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The content of this article is intended to provide a general guide to the subject matter. Specialist advice should be sought about your specific circumstances.